[Coroner] Was it light? - It was getting light, but I could see all over the place.
[Coroner] Did you sit on the top step? - No, on the middle step; my feet were on the flags of the yard.
[Coroner] You must have been quite close to where the deceased was found? - Yes, I must have seen her.
None of the Backslapping Chums have provided a credible argument as to why this wasn't the case and why Richardson would have lied under oath. There is the sum total of nowt to say that Richardson was lying.
Phillips was ready to entertain a minimum of two hours (and less if you have any sense). Even at two hours the condition of Chapman would have been outside his experience and that of Fisherman's Friend.
Furthermore, were there any circumstances associated with Chapman that would have been unusual at the time, and today for modern experts to deal with? Yes: Chapman was poorly, malnourished, and she was lying on cold flags with her abdomen cut open and internal organs taken out and there had been a great loss of blood. Obviously, she had suffered a very unusual and traumatic death. It was a cool morning.
Is it realistic that if Phillips was happy with a minimum of two hours he could have been out by under an hour, taking into account the unusual death and the appraisals we've heard about related to the use of temperature and RM to estimate ToD? Yes.
Take anything Fisherman says on this with a big pinch of salt because an early ToD is critical for his case.
[Coroner] Did you sit on the top step? - No, on the middle step; my feet were on the flags of the yard.
[Coroner] You must have been quite close to where the deceased was found? - Yes, I must have seen her.
None of the Backslapping Chums have provided a credible argument as to why this wasn't the case and why Richardson would have lied under oath. There is the sum total of nowt to say that Richardson was lying.
Phillips was ready to entertain a minimum of two hours (and less if you have any sense). Even at two hours the condition of Chapman would have been outside his experience and that of Fisherman's Friend.
Furthermore, were there any circumstances associated with Chapman that would have been unusual at the time, and today for modern experts to deal with? Yes: Chapman was poorly, malnourished, and she was lying on cold flags with her abdomen cut open and internal organs taken out and there had been a great loss of blood. Obviously, she had suffered a very unusual and traumatic death. It was a cool morning.
Is it realistic that if Phillips was happy with a minimum of two hours he could have been out by under an hour, taking into account the unusual death and the appraisals we've heard about related to the use of temperature and RM to estimate ToD? Yes.
Take anything Fisherman says on this with a big pinch of salt because an early ToD is critical for his case.
Comment